God Forbid - But, What If? Recalling Kirk’s death raises some troubling thoughts about New Zealand’s current prime-minister, Jacinda Ardern. God forfend that it should happen, but if she were to die, suddenly and unexpectedly, in the second year of her premiership – how would she be remembered?
ON SATURDAY, 31 August, it will be 45 years to the day since
Norman Kirk died. He was no age at all, just 51, and although he died in
hospital, hardly any New Zealanders were aware that his reasons for being there
were likely to prove fatal.
That’s why the shock of his passing was so devastating. For
a brief moment it brought the whole country together. Bosses and trade union
leaders stood side-by-side to pay their respects. RSA men wept alongside
long-haired hippies. Pakeha and Maori mourned according to their own
traditions, but, as always, the Maori did so in ways that both enriched and
enlarged the moment of national grief. For the first time, the Maori proverb: Kua
hinga te totara i te wao nui a Tane – A Totara has fallen in the forest of Tane,
imprinted itself upon the cultural consciousness of the Pakeha nation.
The tragedy of “Big Norm’s” passing was by no means
contained within his homeland’s borders. Upon hearing the news in faraway
Tanzania, its President, Julius Nyerere, burst into tears. In Beijing the
Chinese premier, Chou Enlai, bowed three times before Kirk’s photograph in
solemn acknowledgement of his worth. Australia’s Gough Whitlam hastened across
the Tasman to stand by his casket.
Though few were willing, or able, to articulate exactly what
it might be; the feeling that something vitally important to the country’s
future would now be left undone was palpable. Long before he was buried amidst
rain and an all-enveloping mist (as befitted a rangatira of such great mana)
the myth of Norman Kirk and his all-too-brief prime-ministership was sending
its taproots down deep into the nation’s collective memory.
Recalling Kirk’s death raises some troubling thoughts about
New Zealand’s current prime-minister, Jacinda Ardern. God forfend that it
should happen, but if she were to die, suddenly and unexpectedly, in the second
year of her premiership – how would she be remembered?
Only the most churlish (and dishonest) of observers would
suggest that the death of “Jacinda” would inspire anything less than a truly
massive outpouring of national grief. The public’s sense of shock and
bereavement would be every bit as great as that which greeted Kirk’s demise.
Indeed, it would, almost certainly, be greater. Young New Zealanders, in
particular, would feel that they had lost not only a personal friend, but a
generational champion. Jacinda’s defining quality of empathy would be reflected
many times over in the over-brimming emotions of the nation’s stricken youth.
The parallels would not end there. As a living Prime
Minister, Kirk had towered above his political contemporaries. The NZ Labour
Party contained no one within its parliamentary ranks who could hold a candle
to “The Boss”. His eventual successor, the intelligent and thoroughly decent
Wallace “Bill” Rowling, was never able to escape Kirk’s huge shadow. The only
political leader of any substance left upon the national stage following Kirk’s
departure, was the Leader of the Opposition, Rob Muldoon. Everyone who understood
the politics of the day grasped immediately that he was the man who, in just 15
months, would be leading the country. The moment Big Norm’s heart stopped
beating, Labour became a dead man walking. Without Jacinda, Labour would,
similarly, be transformed instantly into a zombie party.
The Myth of Jacinda, like Kirk’s, would swell rapidly to
epic proportions. “If only Grant Robertson, Winston Peters and James Shaw had
let Jacinda be Jacinda!”, would be the cry that went up from her bereft
followers, “Instead of always coming up with reasons why everything she wanted
to do couldn’t be done. If only she had been allowed to spend the money needed
to end child poverty and homelessness. If only all those men hadn’t prevented
her from making Climate Change – as she had promised – the Nuclear-Free Moment
of her generation. Jacinda knew what had to be done – why wasn’t she empowered
to simply forge ahead and do it?”
Like Kirk before her, a Jacinda taken from her people many
years before her time, would rapidly become the righteous receptacle for an
ever-increasing multitude of what-ifs and might-have-beens.
Nearly always, the counterfactuals swirling around Kirk
posit an alternative future in which all of the Third Labour Government’s
reforms – NZ Superannuation in particular – bear healthy fruit and prosper.
Hardly ever do those who ask “What if?” raise the possibility that, even in the
New Zealand where a healthy Norman Kirk contests the 1975 general election, a
rampantly populist Rob Muldoon might still have delivered a knockout blow
against the big man’s government. What if the
widely-held assumption that “Big Norm” would have defeated Muldoon
easily is dead wrong? What if, as is demonstrably happening to Jacinda as she
approaches the second anniversary of her prime-ministership, the gloss had
well-and-truly come off Kirk?
In 1974-75 a great many New Zealanders were frightened and
angry. Frightened by the power of the trade unions; by New Zealand’s growing
indebtedness; by inflation eating away at the purchasing power of their
salaries and pensions; by hippies and protesters calling the shots at home
(hadn’t they persuaded Kirk to cancel the 1973 Springbok Tour?) and by Third
World nations defeating the United States, and pushing up the price of oil,
abroad. Young people, women and Maori had forgotten their place. Many of the
old certainties were under serious challenge – along with the authority figures
who defended them. Conservative working-class voters, no less than National’s
traditional middle-class supporters, were looking for a strong leader: someone
prepared to give them New Zealand the way they wanted it.
Who’s to say that, under a first-past-the-post electoral
system, that fear and anger would not have been enough to overpower even Norman
Kirk’s hopeful visions of the future?
We shall never know. Forty-five years on, Kirk’s
might-have-beens, like the lustre of the man himself, are still sufficiently
tantalising to inspire us. Courage. Vision. A principled refusal to step back
when confronted with the concentrated malice of the Powers-That-Be. These
remain the sacred political talismans handed down by the Labour Prime Minister
who died on Saturday, 31st August 1974.
All nations need a mythologised Totara to shelter under.
Even after it has fallen.
This essay was originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Thursday, 29 August 2019.
No, we will never know. NZ and the free world lost a champion. But Muldoon'd destruction of the NZ Superannuation Scheme(illegally done, should have gone through Parliament) has left the country a poorer place.
ReplyDeleteLike Big Norm Jacinda Ardern is the benevolent dictator this country needs. If the electorate at large was smart she would get the mandate. Lets see what happens with the smarts at 2020 election.
ReplyDelete"Courage. Vision. A principled refusal to step back when confronted with the concentrated malice of the Powers-That-Be."
ReplyDeleteYeah maybe, but Norman Kirk was the epitome of your Kiwi bloke at the time. Distrusted educated people, socially extremely conservative. What he might have become as a matter of speculation, and maybe hope.
Jacinda's legacy is "they are us" and it's echo "who are we then?". Also censorship -the Christchurch call. Since Brexit and Trump there has been a doubling down through censorship and up the volume.
ReplyDeleteJacinda's world is the world of the limousine liberal brought to us by a MSM who are at the wrong end of a trust spectrum. They are hiding unpleasant facts about what could have been a better world for the average New Zealander
https://youtu.be/Q7gypBpOz9g
Like Kirk, Ardern converted here youthful religiosity into the cult of politics. Both politicians arrived at the right time to capitalise on a Victimhood Culture cycle. But Prime Ministers don't set they tide, they have to ride it. When being the 'fairy on our Christmas tree' loses currency these cults of personality are doomed. Kirk gets to stay in New Zealand because he's dead but Jacinda will need new pastures for her 2020s.
ReplyDeletePerhaps she can catch the next VC wave as a granny and rule again? I don't know, I'm not her career advisor.
Norman Kirk, short on detail but certainly the charisma to inspire. You can argue the same applies to Jacinda Ardern. Not sure though that NK ever lost the gloss the way Ardern has in recent months. We are of course comparing two quite different eras, FPP vs MMP, but one does have to wonder if we will see a repeat of Kirk's one term government in 2020.
ReplyDeleteChris ... we will, most times, agree to disagree but I enjoy your musings as an honest socialist. Keep on keeping on.
Trouble is that the only thing Adern has delivered is promises. What a hopeless individual.
ReplyDeleteJacinda does not model herself on Norman Kirk or Mickey Savage or even Helen Clark. With consort and child, she mimics the young Elizabeth, presiding over a multi-cultural commonwealth, employing the symbolism of the korowai and the hijab wherever such symbols and the words that accompany them can be used to ease grievance and allay discontent among her people.
ReplyDeleteShe eschews the political. Politics is the responsibility of her ministers, and more particularly of her state officials. As symbol of the nation she herself is above politics.
We have accepted Jacinda in her chosen role. Our people petition her as in days gone by they petitioned Queen Victoria and King George for redress of grievances, and the results of their petitions are also as in days gone by. She may listen graciously. She displays compassion when it is politically appropriate to do so. She leaves the decisions to others, and some of us are content with that.
Jacinda reigns but she does not rule. Her role is not to transform or redeem but to personify the nation as a pure ideal.
Do not expect her to be a Norman Kirk, far less a Michael Joseph Savage.
Thanks for bouncing down to the bottom as ever, letters column -- can see the advantage, being suffused with far, far too many opinions.
ReplyDeleteSaddened by Bernard Hickey's Stuff column today about Labour's take-back of the 100,000 house goal. Someone, elsewhere, suggested Labour never repairs the damage of National despite what they say. But no one doubts Kirk would do something. Oh me, oh mi, what is the difference? Roge. Or, a revolution is necessary in Labour. It's as simple, in this media age, as a voice people can't deny. Bernie and Jeremy.